Mental Flosshttp://mentalfloss.com/node/27105/atom.xml2016-12-10T03:19:15+00:00http://mentalfloss.com/article/27105/putting-good-face-it-evolution-mr-potato-head2014-01-12T16:13:09+00:002015-06-17T21:45:49+00:00Putting a Good Face on it: The Evolution of Mr. Potato Headthe mag

It started as body parts you jabbed into real potatoes and became a cultural phenomenon, resulting in some sweet film roles and government work. Let’s go back to the beginning.

1949: A Spud is Born

Brooklyn-born toy inventor George Lerner tries to capitalize on kids who like to play with their food. Surprisingly, Lerner’s idea of creating face and body parts that can be jabbed into potatoes is a hard sell. Toy companies worry that parents who’ve just lived through World War II-era food shortages will balk at the thought of wasting perfectly good food.

1952: The Tuber Spreads

Hasbro sees the genius in Lerner’s product and agrees to market it, creating the first-ever TV ads for a toy. It turns out that parents have few misgivings about squandering their potatoes; more than 1 million Mr. Potato Heads sell that year alone.

1950s: Family Man

Mr. Potato Head gets an arranged marriage. In 1953, Hasbro outfits him with an instant family: Mrs. Potato Head, son Spud, and a daughter, Yam. He also gets a car, a boat, and a kitchen in the deal. Within a few years, the likable Spud makes friends with pals Katie the Carrot and Pete the Pepper.

1964 and 1974: Attack of the Rotten Potatoes

When parents complain about finding moldy potatoes under their kids’ beds, Mr. Potato Head ditches his organic body for a plastic one. Ten years later, new rules about choking hazards compel Hasbro to merge the head and body into one legless lump.

1980s: Fries on the Side

Arnold Schwarzenegger and the President’s Council on Physical Fitness give him an award for abandoning his couch-potato lifestyle. Curiously, his new healthy habits don’t stop Mr. Potato Head from endorsing Burger King, McDonald’s, Wendy’s, and Hardee’s.

1992: A Spokesspud is Born

Mr. Potato Head trades his dapper hat for a green baseball cap and exchanges his loafers for blue tennis shoes. In keeping with his new, sportier look, he also quits smoking in 1987 for the American Cancer Society’s Great American Smokeout. To show his support for the anti-smoking campaign, he publicly hands over his signature tobacco pipe to U.S. Surgeon General C. Everett Koop.

1995: Supersized

Mr. Potato Head makes his big-screen debut in Toy Story, but his most prestigious gig is yet to come. In 2000, Mr. Potato Head becomes the official travel ambassador for Rhode Island, “the Birthplace of Fun,” where Hasbro is headquartered.

And let’s hear it for some of the best special edition Mr. Potato Heads: Optimash Prime, Tony Starch, Luke Frywalker, and Taters of the Lost Ark (known in some sets as Idaho Jones).